Speedy Scala Builds with Bazel at Databricks

Databricks migrated over from the standard Scala Build Tool (SBT) to using Bazel to build, test and deploy our Scala code. Through improvements in our build infrastructure, Scala compilation workflows that previously took minutes to tens of minutes now complete in seconds. This post will walk you through the improvements we made to achieve that, and demonstrate the concrete speedup each change contributed to the smooth experience using Scala with Bazel at Databricks.

The Databricks Codebase

The Databricks codebase is a Monorepo, containing the Scala code that powers most of our services, Javascript for front-end UI, Python for scripting, Jsonnet to configure our infrastructure, and much more.

The Scala portion is by far the largest, and at time of writing comprises:

1,000,000 lines of Scala code

Split over 5500 source files

In 600 modules (also known as Targets in Bazel)

Deployed as a few dozen different services.

While we appreciate Scala as a programming language, everyone knows that the Scala compiler is slow. Despite recent improvements, some benchmarks put it about 6x slower than the Java compiler when compiling the equivalent code. Compared to most programming languages, it is much easier for Scala compilation times to get out of hand. This was borne out by the feedback in our internal surveys, which specifically called out our Scala code as taking too long to compile:

Building + applying the build take too much time. End up spending a lot of 1-2 minutes time fragments everyday waiting for build/sync

Building scala projects in Bazel (~10-15 min).

Compiling app (~30 seconds). Compiling app tests (~90 seconds)

This feedback from our engineers kicked off a series of projects to do something about these long iteration cycles, which we will present below. As a baseline for discussion, we will compare the experience of working with two modules within our Scala codebase:

//common: a general-purpose utility module that doesn’t depend on much (relatively speaking) but is used throughout our codebase.

//app: a common webservice, this depends on a large number of other modules (including //common) but isn’t directly used by other Scala modules (we end up deploying it in a docker container).

With the following statistics:

Target

# Source Files

# Source lines

# Transitive Files

# Transitive Lines

# Transitive Modules

//common

176

22,000

500

50,000

15

//app

48

13,000

1,100

180,000

112

Each of these Scala modules has a number of upstream modules that it depends on. Using Bazel (and sed to clean up some of our legacy-related noise) it is straightforward to visualize the structure of that dependency graph:

Viewing the structure of //common‘s dependency graph, we can see that some modules such as //common/client:client, //common/options:options, and //utils:process_utils are independent: they do not depend on each other in any way, and thus Bazel will compile them in parallel. On the other hand, other modules like //common:common, //common/options:options, and //db/utils:db-utils do have dependencies on each other, and thus Bazel is forced to compile them sequentially.

The dependency graph for //app is similar, just much larger and too messy to show here. We will use these two modules to demonstrate how our various performance-related efforts impact two primary Scala compilation workflows:

Clean builds: these involve re-compiling every Scala module in our codebase, or at least the ones that the module you want depends on. This often happens when you set up a new laptop, or when you change branch using Git and end up modifying tons of files.

Delta builds: these involve re-compiling a small number of Scala modules, often a single one, after making a small change, often to a single file. This often happens during iterative development, perhaps adding a single println and seeing what it prints out.

How Bazel Works

Before we discuss concrete performance numbers, it helps to have a basic understanding of what Bazel is.

Bazel is a flexible, general-purpose build tool from Google. Bazel helps you keep track of dependencies between parts of your codebase: when you ask Bazel to compile a module (also called a target), Bazel re-uses already-compiled code where ever possible and parallelizes compilation of modules which do not depend on one another. The end goal is producing the compiled output you asked for as quickly as possible.

At its core Bazel is built around the concept of Targets that live in BUILD files, which themselves live in subfolders in your project folder. A Target is essentially a shell command that takes input files and generates output files, for example:

BUILD files like above are written in a subset of the Python language known as Starlark. The above BUILD file defines a single target using the genrule function (Bazel functions are also called rules): that target takes two input files testing_mode.py and main.jsonnet, and runs a shell command in a sandbox to generate a single output file main_testing_mode.jsonnet:

This is similar to how Makefiles work, except written in Python rather than a bespoke Makefile syntax.

The above target can be built using bazel build, which returns the main_testing_mode.jsonnet file listed in the outs array:

The first time you run bazel build on this target, it will run the cmd given to invoke python on the given inputs. Subsequent runs will simply return the already-built outputfile, unless the one of the inputs to this target (testing_mode.py or main.jsonnet) changed since the last run. This is similar to the venerable Make build tool.

One difference between Bazel and Make is that Bazel lets you define your own helper functions: if you have the same few targets being defined over and over (e.g., maybe every Scala compile target also has a linter you can run, and a REPL you can open), or a few targets that look more-or-less the same (e.g. they all shell out to the Scala compiler in the same way), wrap them in a function to keep your build configuration DRY.

For example, the following target defines a jsonnet_to_json function that internally calls genrule to convert the main_testing_mode.jsonnet file (which we constructed above) into a main_testing_mode.json file that can be used elsewhere:

While helper functions like jsonnet_to_json make things more convenient, if you dig into the implementation, you will eventually find a shell command similar to the one we saw above that actually runs on the input srcs files to generate the output outs files. The above two targets and the two input files define the following dependency graph:

Bazel itself doesn’t really care what each target does. As long as each target converts input files into output files using a shell command, that’s all Bazel needs. In exchange, Bazel will do everything else: cache generated files if their inputs didn’t change, invalidate the caches when something changes, parallelize shell commands that do not depend on each other, and so on.

Naive Bazel Scala Integration

Bazel does not know anything about Scala by default, but there is an open-source bazel-scala integration in rules_scala that contains a few helper functions (similar to jsonnet_to_json above) to help you compile Scala code by shelling out to the Scala compiler. In essence, it provides a scala_library helper function that can be used as follows:

scala_library(
name = "jsonutil", # target name
srcs = glob(["src/main/**/*.scala"]), # source files that will be made available to the compiler
deps = ["//jsonutil/jars"], # Dependencies available to compiler and runtime
)

You give the scala_library target a list of source files in srcs, any upstream scala_library targets in deps, and it will shell out to the Scala compiler with the necessary command-line flags to compile your sources and give you a compiled jar file, spawning one compiler subprocess per module:

While this does work, performance is a big issue. Shelling out to spawn new compiler subprocesses over and over is inefficient for a variety of reasons:

We pay the heavy cost of JVM startup time for every target we compile.

The short-lived subprocesses never benefit from the JIT compilation that happens once the JVM has warmed up.

We end up with multiple compiler processes running concurrently, hogging the RAM of your laptop.

Using this naive subprocess-spawning compilation strategy, the time taken to compile both //app and //common, Clean and Delta builds, is as follows:

Action

Naive

//app (Clean)

1065s

//app (Delta)

26s

//common (Clean)

186s

//common (Delta)

38s

Almost 20 minutes to clean rebuild the //app target, and 3 minutes to clean rebuild //common. Note that this includes some degree of parallelism, as mentioned above.

Even Delta builds, maybe adding a single println, take around 30 seconds. This is pretty slow, and doesn’t include the time needed to do other things in your workflow (running tests, packaging docker containers, restarting services, etc.).

For both targets, and both workflows, this is a tremendously slow experience and would be unacceptable to our engineers who are modifying, recompiling, and testing their code day in and day out.

Long-lived Worker Processes

The first big improvement we made to our Scala compilation infrastructure was making use of Bazel’s support for long-lived worked processes. Bazel allows you to make a target use a long-lived worker process, rather than repeatedly shelling out to a subprocess, in order to fully take advantage of technologies like the JVM whose performance starts off poor but improves over time as the JIT compiler kicks in. This allows us to keep our Scala compiler process live, and the JVM hot in-memory, by sharing a pool of worker processes between all modules that need to be compiled:

This results in a significant speedup:

Action

Naive

Worker

//app (Clean)

1065s

279s

//app (Delta)

26s

9s

//common (Clean)

186s

84s

//common (Delta)

38s

18s

As you can see, by converting our naive subprocess-spawning Bazel-Scala integration to long-lived workers, compile are down 2-4x across the board. Clean compiles of the app now take 5 minutes instead of almost 20 minutes.

By default, Bazel spawns N different workers which allow building N targets in parallel (N is often the number of cores available) each of which compiles modules in a single-threaded fashion. Databricks’ Scala Bazel integration instead shares a single multi-threaded JVM worker process that is able to process a number of modules at once in parallel:

This greatly reduces the memory usage, since Scala compiler processes are heavy-weight and can easily take 1-2 gb of memory each. The initial warm-up is also faster as the JVM quickly reaches the amount of load necessary to JIT optimize the running code.

Upgrading to Scala 2.12

When Databricks was founded in the halcyon days of 2013, Scala 2.10 was the latest version of the language, and it remained the version of Scala used throughout our codebase out of inertia. However, the core Scala team has put in a lot of work to try and improve the performance of the compiler, and by upgrading from 2.10 to Scala 2.12, we should be able to let Databricks engineers enjoy those speedups.

Upgrading from Scala 2.10 to 2.12 was a slow, multi-step process:

Prepare 2.12 compatible versions of all our third-party dependencies: some were on old versions, and were only 2.12 compatible on more recent versions.

Prepare Bazel helper functions to cross-build modules between Scala 2.10 and 2.12. Greatly simplified, this was just a function with a loop to define different versions of a target and its dependencies:

Incrementally roll out 2.12 support using cross_scala_library across the entire 600-target/million-line codebase, including running all unit and integration tests on Scala 2.12.

Deploy 2.12 versions of our various services to production.

Remove the old 2.10 support once our 2.12-compiled code was in production and running smoothly.

Most of the work was getting all the build configuration, third-party libraries, etc. lined up correctly to cross-build things; there were relatively few code changes. Here is a sampling of some of the commit logs from that period:

Delete some PropertyCheckConfig customization in our tests since the new version of ScalaCheck doesn’t support it

Remove some overloads that Scala 2.12 doesn’t like due to their ambiguity (Scala’s not meant to allow multiple overloads with default parameters, but I guess 2.10 is a bit sloppy)

Use InternalError instead of NotImplementedError to test fatal exceptions, since the latter is no longer fatal in 2.12

Floating point literals cannot end with a trailing ., so I added a 0 after the .

Necessary changes, but generally pretty small. The whole process took several months of on-and-off work, but went smoothly without any incident.

The exact speedup we got varied greatly. Here’s a benchmark where we compared compilation times of a wide range of modules, before and after the upgrade:

Target

2.10 Compile

2.12 Compile

Ratio

//manager

40s

23s

58%

//manager_test

28s

18s

64%

//app:handlers

21s

13s

62%

//elastic

18s

11s

61%

//launcher

13s

8s

61%

//launcher:launcher_test

19s

9s

47%

We saw about a 30-60% reduction in compile times across the board. Test suites seemed to benefit more than non-test modules, probably thanks to the new Java 8 Lambda Encoding that reduces the number of class files generated by our lambda-heavy Scalatest FunSuites.

This upgrade also resulted in much smaller compiled .jar files:

Target

2.10 Jar Size

2.12 Jar Size

Ratio

//manager

3.7mb

2.4mb

65%

//manager_test

5.6mb

1.8mb

32%

//app:trees

2.6mb

1.8mb

69%

//app:handlers

2.0mb

1.3mb

65%

//elastic

1.9mb

1.6mb

84%

//launcher

1.2mb

0.8mb

67%

//launcher:launcher_test

1.3mb

0.5mb

38%

Overall, upgrading from Scala 2.10 to 2.12 wasn’t an order-of-magnitude improvement in performance, but was still a significant across the board win. Almost every workflow, from compilation, to packaging, to deployment, all benefited significantly from the shorter compilation times and smaller compiled .jar files.

Going back to our original benchmarks, we can see the significant improvement in compilation performance that arises from the Scala 2.10 to Scala 2.12 upgrade

Action

Naive

Worker

Scala 2.12

//app (Clean)

1065s

279s

181s

//app (Delta)

26s

9s

6s

//common (Clean)

186s

84s

74s

//common (Delta)

38s

18s

14s

Remote Caching

Bazel by default caches compiled artifacts locally: if you call bazel build on the same target twice, the second run will be almost instant as Bazel simply returns the file that was produced by the first. While this makes Delta builds relatively quick, it doesn’t help for Clean builds, where Bazel still ends up having to compile large portions of your codebase before you can start working on the module you are interested in.

In addition to the local cache, Bazel also has support for Remote Caching. That means that whenever someone generates a file, perhaps the output .jar from the //common module, Bazel will upload it to a central server and make it available for anyone else on the team to download (assuming the inputs and the command generating that file are the same):

That means that each file only needs to get compiled once throughout your engineering organization: if someone already compiled //app on the latest master, you can simply download the generated files onto your laptop without needing to compile anything at all!

Bazel’s remote cache backends are pluggable: Nginx, Google Cloud Storage, Amazon S3, etc. can all be used for the backend storage. At Databricks we utilize a simple multi-level cache with two layers:

The exact speedup that the Remote Cache gives you varies greatly depending on your network latency and throughput, but even on so-so residential WiFi, the gains are substantial:

Action

Naive

Worker

Scala 2.12

Remote Cache

//app (Clean)

1065s

279s

181s

60s

//app (Delta)

26s

9s

6s

–

//common (Clean)

186s

84s

74s

18s

//common (Delta)

38s

18s

14s

–

Here, we can see it takes just 1 minute to do a clean “build” of the //app target if the artifacts are already remotely cached, and only 20s to do a clean build of //common. For people on fast office Wifi/Wired connections, it would take even less time.

That means that someone downloading the Databricks monorepo and starting work on our 180,000 line web application can get everything “compiled” and ready to begin development in 60s or less: a huge improvement from the 20 minutes it originally took!

Apart from speeding up Scala compilation, remote caching works with anything: bundling Javascript, building Docker images, constructing tarballs, etc.– all can benefit. And because the remote cache also supports our CI test-running machines, we found usage of the cache greatly reduced the CI time necessary to compile our code before running tests. This saves developers a lot of amount of time waiting for PR validation:

Action

Uncached Run

Remote Cache

Full Build

70m

10m

Full Test

90m

30m

Overall, this was a huge win all around.

Cloud Devboxes

So far, we have managed to substantially speed up people working with Scala code on their laptops: clean builds are 10-15x faster, and Delta builds are 3-4x faster than before. However, there are many reasons why you may not want to build code on your laptop at all:

Laptops are usually limited to 4 cores and 16GB of RAM, while Bazel can parallelize work onto as many cores as you can give it (limited only by Amdahl’s Law).

Laptops often have Antivirus, either for security or for compliance, which can seriously degrade performance (especially filesystem IO) via intercepting system calls or performing background scans.

Laptops are often physically far away from the rest of your infrastructure: deployments, package repos, remote caches, etc. all live in a data center with fast wired connections, while your laptop sits in an office somewhere else interacting over slow office WiFi.

Laptops are filled with other programs that fight for system resources: IntelliJ takes 1-2GB of RAM, Chrome 300mb of RAM per tab, Slack another 1gb, Docker another 1-2GB. This quickly eats into the resources you have to actually do work.

Laptops are susceptible to thermal throttling: they could be working at much less than 100% CPU capacity if airflow isn’t good, or the room is hot, or your fans have accumulated dust.

While individually these issues are bearable, together they can add up to significant performance degradation for compiling things on your laptop v.s. compiling things on a dedicated single-purpose machine.

Databricks solves this issue by providing engineers with remote Cloud Devboxes: beefy 16-Core/64GB-RAM Linux VMs hosted on Amazon EC2. These are spun up on-demand, have files efficiently synced over from your laptop, and shut down when not in use. We currently use a custom sync engine that gives us somewhat snappier syncing v.s. rsync/watchdog/watchman, and better IO performance than NFS/SSHFS/Samba.

A new engineer at Databricks simply needs to run the devbox/sync command to spin up a new devbox that they can then SSH into and begin using. They can edit files on their laptop using their favorite editor or IDE, and seamlessly run terminal commands over SSH to build/run/test their code on the remote machine, getting the best of both worlds of convenience and performance. These devboxes are hosted in the same AWS region as many of our other development services and infrastructure:

The fast network between the Devbox and other infrastructure means that expensive operations like downloading binaries from the remote cache can be much faster, while the slow network between your laptop and the Devbox isn’t a problem given the small amounts of data typically transferred back and forth over the SSH terminal.

Cloud Devboxes significantly speed up all workflows:

Action

Naive

Worker

Scala 2.12

Remote Cache

Devbox (Non-Cached)

Devbox (Cached)

//app (Clean)

1065s

279s

181s

60s

100s

2s

//app (Delta)

26s

9s

6s

–

5s

–

//common (Clean)

186s

84s

74s

18s

30s

1s

//common (Delta)

38s

18s

14s

–

7s

–

Here, we can see that non-cached clean and Delta builds take half as much time as before. Even more impressively, cached builds that download already-compiled artifacts are almost instant, taking barely 1 or 2 seconds! This makes sense when you consider that the bottleneck for cached builds is network throughput and latency, and in-datacenter gigabit networking is going to be orders-of-magnitude faster than your slow office Wifi.

The m5-4xlarge machines that we provide by default cost 0.768$/hr. While that would be expensive to keep running all the time (~550$ a month), an engineer working on it for 20hrs/week (optimistically spending half of their 40hr work week actively coding) would only end up costing about 4$/day, which is definitely worth the significant increase in productivity.

Fine-Grained Incremental Compilation

The last major performance improvement we have made is a fine-grained incremental compilation. While Bazel is able to cache and re-use compiled artifacts on a per-module basis, the Scala incremental compiler (named Zinc) is able to cache and re-use the compiled output of individual files and classes within a module. This further reduces the amount of code you need to compile, especially during iterative development where you are often tweaking methods or adding printlns in a single file.

While the old version of Zinc had a standalone compile-server and command-line interface to it, the current version has lost that capability. Instead, we use the ZincWorker from the Mill Scala build tool for our incremental compilation needs, which is modular enough to simply drop into our Bazel Scala compile worker process. ZincWorker wraps all the messiness of Zinc’s implementation details and provides a relatively straightforward API to call:

Essentially, you give the ZincWorker a list of upstream CompilationResults (which includes both compiled class files as well as metadata “analysis” files), and it incrementally compiles it and returns a new CompilationResult containing the compiled class files and analysis file for this compilation target.

The incremental compilation doesn’t affect clean builds, but it can greatly speed up Delta builds where you are making small changes to a single file:

Action

Naive

Worker

Scala 2.12

Remote Cache

Devbox (Non-Cached)

Devbox (Cached)

Incremental

//app (Clean)

1065s

279s

181s

60s

100s

2s

–

//app (Delta)

26s

9s

6s

–

5s

–

1s

//common (Clean)

186s

84s

74s

18s

30s

1s

–

//common (Delta)

38s

18s

14s

–

7s

–

1s

Here we can see that Delta builds for both //app and //common are now down to 1 second each! That’s about as fast as you could hope for.

Due to rare issues that may turn up in the Zinc incremental compiler (for example #630), we have made incremental compilation opt-in via a command-line flag: SCALA_INCREMENTAL:

This way engineers who are iterating on some code can use it, but the vast majority of batch processes, CI builds, and deployment workflows will remain non-incremental. If any issues turn up with the incremental compiler, an engineer can simply drop the SCALA_INCREMENTAL flag to fall back to the tried-and-trusted batch workflow.

Conclusion

Even though our monorepo contains a million lines of Scala, working with code within is fast and snappy. This was not through one silver bullet, but through a series of incremental improvements to chip away at the compile-time problem from a variety of different angles.

When iterating on a single module or test suite, things build and are ready to use in a matter of seconds, not unlike the experience of working with much smaller projects:

From the point of view of engineers working on any of our many products and services, the upgrades were almost entirely transparent: things magically got faster without them needing to lift a finger. This lets Web developers focus on web development, cloud infrastructure people can focus on cloud infrastructure, and machine learning experts can focus on machine learning, all simply relying on the simple, stable and performant build infrastructure that everyone shares.

Despite the transparency of the effort, developers did notice and appreciate the changes, and said so on our internal developer surveys:

Dev cycles are pretty fast, and getting faster

I like Bazel and I am learning to love the build cache!

Bazel building across multiple languages is surprisingly fast.

There still are cases where compilation time is problematic: for example, the large 500-file modules of the apache/spark project. Nevertheless, for many engineers, Scala compilation has been reduced from a daily headache to an occasional nuisance.

This work on speeding up Scala compiles itself is part of a larger effort: to improve the productivity of Databricks engineers more broadly: Speeding up Docker workflows, Javascript UI development, CI test runs, etc. In fact, improvements like Cloud Devboxes or Remote Caching are language agnostic, and help speed up all sorts of builds regardless of what specific files you are building.

If you are interested in contributing to our world-class Scala development environment or experiencing what a smooth and productive Scala development is like, you should come work for us!